
15-12-2006, 11:16
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I live for the details.
 FRC #3620 (Average Joes)
Team Role: Engineer
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Join Date: Jan 2003
Rookie Year: 1996
Location: Southwestern Michigan
Posts: 3,646
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Re: WPI to offer 1st major in robotics
Quote:
Originally Posted by Andrew Blair
This is what several engineering professors have told me when I prodded them about a robotics bachelors:
" Undergraduate study is for experimentation (learning, learning...) and a broad learning experience. Study something like robotics as a graduate."
I agree with this for a couple of reasons. Firstly, as Mike said, a robotics degree is good for one thing. Robotics. And if you can't get a job in robotics, you're more or less SOL. An ME or EE or CE can get a job in thousands of different fields, everything from light bulbs to air conditioners to furniture design, and there's a always a job somewhere. Not necessarily so with robotics.
Secondly, there is a reason that there aren't any robotics bachelors. Until very recently, the only robotics opportunities were through a graduate degree anyways! As more and more applications grow, there is a larger market for not only products, but personnel to design them. However, we have not seen the huge demand yet for engineers fresh out of school to go into robotics!
I'm sure WPI's program is good, but as far as being marketable right out of school, it seems best to broaden your options. Doesn't mean you won't get a job with a robotics degree or won't get a robotics job with an ME degree, you just have more options.
It seems the best option is to pursue either ME, CE, or EE, and then concentrate or minor in robotics if you really want to. Carnegie Mellon offers a minor in robotics for the technical degree kids, and it looks pretty promising. Even they, the only university in the world to offer a PhD in robotics, do not offer an undergraduate major in it.
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Robotics might be considered an advanced study topic (i.e., graduate degree program), but mechatronics is not. There have been undergraduate mechatronics degree programs in many parts of the world for several years now. And their graduates do get jobs.
__________________
Richard Wallace
Mentor since 2011 for FRC 3620 Average Joes (St. Joseph, Michigan)
Mentor 2002-10 for FRC 931 Perpetual Chaos (St. Louis, Missouri)
since 2003
I believe in intuition and inspiration. Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited, whereas imagination embraces the entire world, stimulating progress, giving birth to evolution. It is, strictly speaking, a real factor in scientific research.
(Cosmic Religion : With Other Opinions and Aphorisms (1931) by Albert Einstein, p. 97)
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